70 ."-:":: "..... . :.... /--' ". .,. :. -=-. .: t 1 ., 1 :.,:..: < ". ' _., ...:::::... : : <>, ..' p ç EAU DE COLOGNE " '.- CHANEL < ? w; " .. I . . v , . ..... .. <$- MOÑ5IE R . pOUR . /'* . 00 -PLU A GENTLEMAN'S COLOGNE CHAN E,L .:::: .: other sIde of the island from where our headquarters was to be. On the flagshIp, they would be censored by a naval cen- sor and then given back to me, after which I could return by boat and jeep to our headquarters and could then airmail them to Pearl Harbor, where, If the Navy press radio was able to accommo- date them, in addition to news stories of what the Navy was doing, the dis- patches would be radioed to their des- tinations-the Associated Press, the United Press, the InternatIonal News Service, the New York Times, and so on. ThIs would mean that with good luck all around-nobody falling into the water on the way to or from the Is- land Commander's flagship-these dis- patches about the first B-29 raid on Tokyo would reach the public about a week or tèn days after the event I thanked the Island Commander and flew back to Honolulu." "How was the thing finally accom- plished? " "Thanks to Admiral Nimitz, I was able to brief the correspondents-about twenty of them-several days before the date set for the first B-29 raid on Tokyo, and they wrote their 'advance' stories at our headquarters on Saipan. A naval censor was assigned to duty at our headquarters, and he censored the sto- ries there. Copies of all these dispatches were airmailed to the Pentagon for re- lease when the 'bombs-awa)' message was relayed from our headquarters to the Pentagon. Pending receipt of that message, the stories were classified 'Top Secret.' In case the copies of these dis- patches didn't get to the Pentagon in time, the originals were filed with naval communications centers on Saipan and Guam and with our own communica- tions centers on the same two islands, to be radioed to their destinations when we got the 'bombs-away' message. When the planes returned to Saipan, of course, there were follow-up stories- including those written by a number of ,:., correspondents who had gone along on the raid-and these were also censored at our headquarters and radioed to their destinations. " "You say thIS was accomplished thanks to Admiral Nimitz?" " y ." es, SIr. "WilI you explaIn how that came about?" "Through staff work on our part and what I believe was a sincere will- ingness on Admiral Nimitz's part to coöperate with us." "What did this staff work consIst f ? " o. "The Twenty-first Bomber Com- ........... .--- \ t .......-., / W I ., b . ..1 < V" our new, lightweight CASUAL STRAW HAT This good-looking casua] or spectator sport hat is n1ade ex- clusively for us of raffia and ramie braid, in an attractive tan and natural n1ixture. Extren1ely lightweight and con1fortabIe, with colorful puggree. Sizes 6 % to 7 %, $] 0.50 Other straw hats from $ 5.5 0, sport caps from $ 4 346 MADISON AYE. COR. 44 ST. NEW YORK 11, N. Y. BOSTON' CHICAGO. LOS ANGELES. SAN FRANCISCO NEW in Newport in '58 . I , accommodations and dining ' a. .. '" , - - '" Write for folder @/ Ocean Drive / MOTOR Æ // HOT E L I../ Newport, R. I. Pre-theatre dining... and just a short stroH to your theatre. (reservations: Raul) After-theatre gathering pl u:e for wonderful drinks and buffet supper with. . . "the talk of the town: .I ë?ftð C 1\'1- U \\\ 59 West 44th Street New York · MUrray HIli 7 4400 ".Yew }O) J.' b( lot'('d 1I0f( l" .... Free Indoor Parklnc for dìnner guests and week-end visitors. .. ... ... 100% AIR CONDITIONED